Belgium's Climate Crisis: Urgent Call for Nationwide Adaptation to Protect Economy and Security

November 6, 2025
Belgium's Climate Crisis: Urgent Call for Nationwide Adaptation to Protect Economy and Security
  • Belgium faces significant economic, health, and national security threats from climate change, per Cerac’s Belgian Climate Risk Assessment, which urges urgent nationwide adaptation.

  • Cerac’s Centre d’analyse des risques du changement climatique released Belgium’s first national risk assessment, highlighting inadequate preparation for current and future climate risks.

  • The overarching message is that climate disasters are increasingly likely, requiring Belgium to shift its risk-response mindset and implement systemic adaptation to protect the economy and security.

  • Vulnerable groups—including the elderly, low-income individuals, farmers, and urban residents—will bear the brunt first, with long-term impacts cascading across all sectors.

  • Identified vulnerable groups point to widespread societal impacts as temperatures rise and extreme weather becomes more frequent.

  • Experts call for urgent strengthening of adaptation policies across health, soil, food security, and insurance, plus a clearer, more effective, and coordinated governance framework.

  • Climate change could undermine the insurance market as claims rise and reinsurers withdraw, potentially making coverage unaffordable or inaccessible for households and businesses.

  • Economic impact could be severe: if policies remain unchanged, public debt could grow by about 15% by 2050, with potential fiscal adjustments around 1.4% of GDP, and past flood damages show vulnerability.

  • Critical sectors—chemicals, pharmaceuticals, food, and tourism—face risks from water scarcity, with annual agricultural losses potentially in the tens of millions of euros.

  • Overall, climate change is a cross-sectoral threat requiring a consistent nationwide adaptation policy and a shift in national security thinking toward prevention, resilience, and cross-cutting risks.

  • Adaptation is urgent and must be treated as a national-security issue, with consistent policy to bolster resilience across society.

  • Findings echo European warnings about Belgium’s climate readiness, underscoring the need for a stronger national adaptation vision and governance.

Summary based on 3 sources


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